
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Everyone lives by faith—even atheists. But is evolution really science-based, or could it be a fairy tale for grown-ups? When scientists find soft, stretchy tissue in dinosaur bones that should have decayed millions of years ago, what does that tell us? When mutation rates suggest humans should be extinct if we evolved over millions of years, how do we explain our existence?
This conversation explores different types of faith, the assumptions underlying science itself, and why Christianity might be the most reasonable worldview when examining the evidence. Richard Fangrad reveals how facts, not feelings, drive true faith.
Find many other interesting videos by Creation Ministries International.
► Follow on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and get the eNewsletter.
Check out the article podcast our other show wherever you get your podcasts.
Thanks for listening!
By Creation.com4.8
129129 ratings
Everyone lives by faith—even atheists. But is evolution really science-based, or could it be a fairy tale for grown-ups? When scientists find soft, stretchy tissue in dinosaur bones that should have decayed millions of years ago, what does that tell us? When mutation rates suggest humans should be extinct if we evolved over millions of years, how do we explain our existence?
This conversation explores different types of faith, the assumptions underlying science itself, and why Christianity might be the most reasonable worldview when examining the evidence. Richard Fangrad reveals how facts, not feelings, drive true faith.
Find many other interesting videos by Creation Ministries International.
► Follow on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and get the eNewsletter.
Check out the article podcast our other show wherever you get your podcasts.
Thanks for listening!

5,174 Listeners

1,701 Listeners

1,513 Listeners

1,255 Listeners

954 Listeners

3,786 Listeners

7,090 Listeners

3,134 Listeners

2,865 Listeners

5,374 Listeners

1,089 Listeners

444 Listeners

72 Listeners

34 Listeners

1,517 Listeners